DMegc Solar’s Lianyungang plant is now cranking out the Infinity 3.0, a 650 Wp monocrystalline panel that promises higher efficiency and lower balance‑of‑system costs. The new line delivers up to 22.5 % efficiency, cuts installation labor, and gives developers a reliable way to boost output without expanding roof space.
Why the 650 Wp Leap Matters
Moving from the typical 400‑500 Wp range to 650 Wp means fewer strings, lighter mounting hardware, and reduced labor per megawatt. For utility‑scale projects you can shave millions off a multi‑gigawatt portfolio, and for rooftop installs a single panel covers more area with fewer mounting points.
Technical Highlights of Infinity 3.0
The module combines half‑cut cell architecture with a refined anti‑reflective front glass. It achieves a nominal efficiency of 22.5 % and a temperature coefficient of –0.38 %/°C, placing it among the best‑in‑class silicon products.
Key Benefits
- Higher power density – more watts per panel reduces overall system size.
- Lower BOS costs – fewer strings and lighter hardware cut material expenses.
- Simplified design – fewer mounting points streamline permitting and installation.
Manufacturing Advances at Lianyungang
The plant now features automated stringer machines and a wafer‑handling robot that minimizes human contact with delicate half‑cut cells. With a capacity of 1.2 GW per year, the line can satisfy a sizable share of global demand for high‑power modules.
Market Impact and Future Outlook
As economies of scale kick in, the price per watt is expected to keep sliding, encouraging developers to retire older, lower‑power panels. Grid operators may also enjoy smoother ramp‑up of solar output because larger modules tend to have tighter performance tolerances.
Practitioner Perspective
“When you move to 650 Wp, you’re not just buying a bigger panel—you’re buying a different system architecture,” says a senior PV engineer who asked to stay off the record. “Inverter sizing, combiner box layout, even cable gauges all shift. It forces you to rethink the whole design, but the payoff is real if you can lock in the lower BOS cost.”
For you, the promise is simple: more power from fewer panels, lower installation costs, and a cleaner, more resilient grid. If the numbers hold up, the Infinity 3.0 could become the new benchmark in the race to cheap, abundant solar energy.
